This article will be permanently flagged as inappropriate and made unaccessible to everyone. Are you certain this article is inappropriate? Excessive Violence Sexual Content Political / Social
Email Address:
Article Id: WHEBN0030011815 Reproduction Date:
Poststructural feminism is a branch of feminism that engages with insights from post-structuralist thought. Poststructural feminism emphasizes "the contingent and discursive nature of all identities",[1] and in particular the social construction of gendered subjectivities.[2] An important contribution of this branch was to establish that there is no universal single category of "woman" or "man" and to identify the intersectionality of sex, race, ethnicity, class, sexuality, nationality, to name only a few.[3]
Like post-structuralism itself, the feminist branch is in large part a tool for literary analysis, but it also deals in psychoanalysis and socio-cultural critique,[4] and seeks to explore relationships between language, sociology, subjectivity and power-relations as they impact upon gender in particular.[5]
Poststructural feminism also seeks to criticize the kyriarchy, while not being limited by narrow understandings of kyriarchal theory, particularly through an analysis of the pervasiveness of othering, the social exile of those men and women removed from the narrow concepts of normal.
Other significant figures in poststructuralist feminism include Monique Wittig, and Julia Kristeva.[10]
Poststructural feminism has been criticised for its abandonment of the humanistic female subject, and for tactical naivety in its rejection of any form of female essentialism.
Second-wave feminism, Women's suffrage, Feminist theory, Women's rights, Third-wave feminism
Gender studies, Feminism, Psychoanalysis, Women's studies, Patriarchy
Gender identity, Feminism, Transgender, Sociology, Feminist theory
Feminist theory, Postmodernism, Feminism, Gender, Feminist economics
Female genital mutilation, China, Feminism, Cambodia, Woman
Feminism, Anarchism, Capitalism, Feminist theory, Radical feminism
Feminism, Women's suffrage, Second-wave feminism, Feminist theory, Feminist movement
Feminism, Feminist theory, Gender studies, Girl, Second-wave feminism